
The golem, legendary creature created put of clay by Rabbi Judah Loew ben Bezalel of Prague in the 15th century to protect the Jewish community from blood libel accusations, is part of the history of horror in Jewish literature. According to the tale the Hebrew emet (truth) was printed on his forehead.
His lecture, titled “Frightening Jews: Toward a Definition of Jewish Horror is co-sponsored by Pitt’s Jewish Studies; German, Cultural Studies, Medieval and Renaissance Studies, Religious Studies, Film Studies programs.
Dauber's research interests include older Yiddish literature, the literature of the Jewish Enlightenment, and Yiddish theater, and he teaches undergraduate and graduate courses on Yiddish literature, as well as courses on humor in Jewish literature and American Jewish literature.
He regularly lectures on topics related to Jewish literature, history, and popular culture at the 92nd Street Y and other venues around the country.
Dauber’s lecture’s coincides with JFilm’s screening of the Israeli horror film “Rabies,” Tuesday, March 27, 7:30 p.m. at Southside Works Cinema. A post-film discussion, “Can You Say ‘Texas Chainsaw Massacre’ in Yiddish? Thinking About Jewish Horror,” which includes Dauber and Pitt film studies professor Adam Lowenstein, will follow.




